I’m guessing that’s because you’re using software decode? If you use HW decode it runs wonderfully in my experience. I could play raw 1080p h264 or VC1 Blu-ray rips over the network just fine**. You have to pay for VC1 and MPEG2 IIRC — otherwise it will try to play in software which is no good. This was an rpi3 with Kodi on Raspbian.
Interestingly I believe they removed MPEG2 and VC1 HW support in the 4, so those files play better on a 3 than a 4. But if your media is in h264 and you use a supported player it should work great on a 4.
** I think NFS worked best, and of course over Ethernet. Maybe http also worked (iirc samba would stutter occasionally).
skintt@lemm.ee 1 year ago
What do you mean? It does 4k @ 60hz.
elouboub@kbin.social 1 year ago
Video, not resolution.
qjkxbmwvz@lemmy.sdf.org 1 year ago
I’m guessing that’s because you’re using software decode? If you use HW decode it runs wonderfully in my experience. I could play raw 1080p h264 or VC1 Blu-ray rips over the network just fine**. You have to pay for VC1 and MPEG2 IIRC — otherwise it will try to play in software which is no good. This was an rpi3 with Kodi on Raspbian.
Interestingly I believe they removed MPEG2 and VC1 HW support in the 4, so those files play better on a 3 than a 4. But if your media is in h264 and you use a supported player it should work great on a 4.
** I think NFS worked best, and of course over Ethernet. Maybe http also worked (iirc samba would stutter occasionally).
mosiacmango@lemm.ee 1 year ago
So you’re comparing the new pi with one that runs at 1/4th the performance and assuming they work the same?
skintt@lemm.ee 1 year ago
Well it isn’t meant to be a gaming PC. Poor gaming performance seems an odd thing to complain about.
Jumuta@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
They’re taking about playing video, not games